According to the AP in December 2008, two of Bernard
Madoff’s most loyal employees met on a Manhattan street corner and fretted over
a closely held secret that the rest of the world would learn about eight days
later: That their boss was a con man for the ages. Frank DiPascali told JoAnn
Crupi that Madoff had just confided that his investment firm was out of money
and that client accounts — worth billions on paper — actually had no more value
than Monopoly money, authorities say.
The pair then is alleged to have cooked up a cover story
that quickly collapsed under the weight of the largest Ponzi scheme in history
— one authorities say cost investors an estimated $17.3 billion. The exchange was
recounted for the first time in a newly-rewritten indictment this week
expanding the case and charges against five defendants headed for a trial next
year. The indictment brings into sharper focus the final few years of a fraud
the government says dated to at least the early 1970s, two decades before
Madoff claimed it began and well before 1992, when the government said in its
original case against the defendants that the conspiracy began. It portrays…..

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